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Get your Mind out of the… Restroom? Euphemisms for Toilet

Seriously, please. After I wrote about eau de Cologne recently, a few of you referred to eaudetoilette in the comments, and it’s clear similarity to the English word toilet (and in fact, eaudetoilette could be directly translated as toiletwater).

Toilet is a surprisingly interesting word. On the surface of course it just refers to the object that stands in your bathroom, but how and when people use it (the word, not the actual toilet) varies quite a bit around the world.

A little history first: the word toilet was first recorded in English in the early 16th century, but with quite a different meaning. It originally meant a cover or bag for clothes, coming from the Middle French word toilette with the same meaning, itself a diminutive form of the word toile (cloth, net). By the late 18th century, the word had become associated with dressing by the upper classes, referring specifically to the fine cloth cover that would be spread upon a dressing table, with objects laid upon it. The meaning of the word then gradually changed over time, soon coming to refer to the act of getting dressed. This was often referred to as makingone’s toilet, a usage you can still find in many books from the 19th and 20th century.

If you were really upper class, then you not only had a very nice dressing room, but one with its own lavatory, and such a room, where you got dressed (made your toilet), became known as atoilet. As time went on, and the link between the word toilet and the idea of dressing became less obvious, toilet came to refer to a room with a lavatory, and also to the lavatory itself.

And things haven’t changed that much. Toilet is now the most common term for a lavatory, and is still often used to refer to a small room with a toilet and wash hand basin, with bathroom referring to a larger room with a bath and/or shower. In British English at least, because in American English, the word toilet usually refers just to the lavatory itself, and a room containing a toilet is often referred to as a bathroom (in a house), or a restroom or a washroom in a public place.

I can understand the desire to refer euphemistically to the toilet/bathroom, and specifically to avoid referring to the object itself. Even still, I’ve always considered restroom to be just a bit too much. Washroom, fine, because you are going to wash your hands (presumably). Bathroom, OK, because you’ll usually find a toilet in a room with a bath. But restroom? Who goes there for a rest? I mean yes, you can sit down there I suppose, but it just seems so euphemistic that it makes you aware that it’s replacing a more unpleasant concept, and makes you think about it, ruining the whole point of a euphemism.

There are of course many other euphemisms for the toilet. Another, more informal one in American English is thejohn. This may have come from the term Jake‘splace, a euphemism for an outhouse (outdoor toilet), which may date to the 16th century. Jake in this case would have referred to a generic peasant, and may have changed to John’s house and then thejohn in the United States, with John being an equally generic male name. Jacks is still an informal euphemism for toilet in general in Ireland, also derived from Jake‘shouse, presumably.

Loo is probably the best known British English term for toilet. Its origins are difficult to pin down. Some suggest it dates back to medieval times. Servants (whose masters would generally have spoken or at least have known some French) would empty chamber pots by throwing them out the window into the street below. They’d usually shout Gardyloo!, from the French Gardez l’eau! (Look out for the water!).

Then there’s the house of office, which has been used since at least the 17th century, featuring in Samuel Pepys’ diary. Thepowderroom is along the lines of restroom for me: so unrelated to the room’s function it actually makes you think of its function.

Privy is more than likely an abbreviation of privateplace, which is the least you can ask for from a toilet.

Going to the toilet in the UK is sometimes referred to as spendingapenny. This is because of the fact that public toilets were introduced to London in the 19th century with locks that could be opened with a penny.

I could go on, but when you think about it, basically every possible way to refer to a toilet is basically a euphemism. As we’ve seen, the word toilet originally had nothing to do with the object, and took a few hundred years to come to its modern meaning via a very scenic route. Even lavatory (late 14th century), which predates toilet, is from the Latinlavatorium, meaning washingplace.

As I’ve said though, it’s quite understandable why we choose to be euphemistic about the toilet, and it’s an interesting case of how language evolves naturally and original meanings get lost, as well of how our own psychology affects the course of linguistic evolution.

Are there any euphemisms you know (in English or other languages) that I haven’t mentioned here?

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16 thoughts on “Get your Mind out of the… Restroom? Euphemisms for Toilet”

From clothes to pee, toilets have come a really long way!!! I had no idea about the original of this word and it’s quite interesting to see how it was actually meant to indicate a cover for expensive clothes and today is used as something completely different! And I love the collection of euphemisms you’ve put out as well!
‘to relieve myself’ is also something people often say when they want to visit the loo!

When I was in New Zealand I asked someone if there was a washroom in the building and he replied, completely seriously, “No, but there’s a toilet just down the hall.” It took me a minute to process what he thought I was looking for!

Eau de toilette is an odd way to call cologne or perfume, don´t you think?.
Interestingly, there is a section in old houses called Fumoir (Smoking/To Smoke) which stands for a sort of place to chill out and smoke… It is not the livingroom, of course.
I have always loved the expression restroom. Bathroom seems a bad word for me to refer to that particular place, as It makes me think of Baths, Showers, or even Saunas. Just my perceptions 😀 Great post, Niall. Love & best wishes 😀

I’ve come to like washroom and restroom for the same reasons, they’re subtle, though restroom still makes me think of someone reclining asleep in a blanket, which feels so out of place! I still don’t understand why we use eau de toilette. It sounds so much like toilet, and if people want a posh French term, they can use eau de Cologne! 😀

I can tell you I remember a time, my childhood in the 1960’s, when ladies’ public bathrooms, such as in a department store, club, or nice restaurant, included a lounge or at least a sofa and chairs in a separate room from the actual facilities, I think the idea being a place to actually rest, catch your breath, so on, and I remember wondering who could get that tired shopping to need it. I wonder if this idea comes from having a separate ladies’ tea room, say, in a hotel. Anyway, that’s my restroom theory!

Shopping (for a certain level of society and always meaning women, never men) used to be a ritualized experience, going to the big store downtown, dressing nicely for the excursion, being waited on, clothes brought to you, etc. Many movies from the 1930’s and 40’s present this experience – I recommend The Women. The ladies’ lounge was all part of it, I think. It fascinates me, since I can just remember the last bits of this era, from my child’s point of view – the whole thing was such an occasion. Now things are different and in a good way (I would hate to think ofritualized shopping as one of my major and only choices as how to spend my days,) but it is still fascinating. I think “restrooms” remind me of that, just an echo, when I use the word. Your post has really taken me back in time to interesting memories. Thank you.

I’m glad to bring back some good memories! As someone who gets quite impatient with shopping, I don’t think the ritual would usually be for me, but it would be nice to have it as an option for an occasional treat :-).

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